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THE CARROLL FREE PRESS, OARR OLLTON, CARROLL COUNTY, OA
THURSDAY, JULY 26, 1923
. , A universal custom
Alter that benefits every-
Fwrv body '
L»vvl/ digestion,
MgaJ cleanses the teeth,
/ soothes the throat.
WRiGLEYS
a good thing
to remember
Sealed in
its Purity
Package
„ THE^r
FLAVOR LASTS
If Kidneys Act
Bad Take Salts
Says Backache Often Means You
Have Not Been Drinking
Enough Water
When you wake up with backache and
dull misery in the kidney region it may
mean you have been eating foods which
create acids, says a well-known author
ity. An excess of such acids overworks
the kidneys in their effort to filter it
from the blood and they become sort of
paralyzed and loggy. When your kid
neys get sluggish and clog you must
relieve them, like you relieve your
bowels, removing all the body's urinous
waste, else you have backache, sick
headache, dizzy spells; your stomach
sours, tongue is coated and when the
weather is had you have rheumatic
twinges. Tlie urine is cloudy, full of
sediment, channels often get sore, water
scalds and you are obliged to seek relief
two or three times during the night.
Either consult a good, reliable physi
cian at once or get from your pharma
cist about four ounces of Jad Salts;
take a tablespoonful in a glass of water
before breakfast for a few days and
your kidneys may then act fine. This
famous salts is made from the acid of
grapes and lemon juice, combined with
lithia, and has been used for years to
help clean and stimulate sluggish kid
neys, also to neutralize acids in the
system, so they no longer irritate, thus
often relieving bladder weakness.
Jad Salts is inexpensive, can not in
jure and makes a delightful, efferves
cent lithia-water drink. Drink lots of
soft water. By all means have your
physician examine your kidneys at least
twice a year.
SAYS RED PEPPER
HEAT STOPS PAIN
IN FEW MINUTES
Rheumatism, lumbago, neuritis, back
ache, stiff neck, sore muscles, strains,
sprains, aching joints. When you are
suffering so you can hardly get around,
just try Red Pepper Rub.
Nothing has such concentrated, pene
trating heat as red peppers, and when
heat penetrates right down into pain
and congestion relief comes at ongc.
Just as soon as you apply Red Pep
per Rub you feel the tingling heat. In
three minutes the sore spot is warmed
through and through and the torture is
gone.
Rowles Red Pepper Rub, made from
red peppers, costs little at any drug
store. Get a jar at once. Be sure to
get the genuine, with the name Rowles
on every package.
SAGE TEA TURNS
GRAY HAIR DARK
It’s Grandmother’s Recipe to
Bring Back Color and
Lustre to Hair
That beautiful, even shade of dark,
glossy hair can only be had by brew
ing a mixture of Sage Tea and Sul
phur. Your hair is your charm. It
makes or mars the face. When it
fades, turns gray or streaked, just an
application or two of Sage and Sul
phur enhances its appearance a hun
dredfold.
Don’t bother to prepare the mixture;
you can get this famous old recipe im
proved by the addition of other ingre
dients at a small cost, all ready for use.
It is called Wyeth’s Sage and Sulphur
Compound. This can always be de
pended upon to bring back die natural
color and lustre of your hair.
Everybody uses “Wyeth’s” Sage and
Sulphur Compound now because it
darkens so naturally and evenly that
nobody can tell it has been applied.
You simply dampen a sponge or soft
brush with it and draw this through
the hair, taking one small strand at a
time; by morning the gray hair has
disappeared, and after another applica-
tion it becomes beautifully dark and
appears glossy and lustrous.
Insect bites ?
MENTHOLATUM
iStops the itching and
/C8 comfort.
The Cow, The Sow And
The Hen
(E. O. DEXTER. Okemah. Okla.)
Yes, the cow, the sow and the hen
Have ever been the farmer’s friend.
You’ll always find, wher’eryou go,
That most farmers have learned to know
That milk and butter buys the duds
And covers the floors with new rugs;
Then you’ll find that most wise men
Keep the cow, the sow and the hen.
The sow makes money for the farm—
She pays her way and does no harm;
She eats the scraps, the cost is small,
Then, there’s the pigs when it comes fall.
She pays for things the housewife needs,
And makes the meat for the family feeds;
Then don’t forget about the pens
That keeps the cow, the sow and the hens.
Now, there’s the hen that lays the egg;
Many fortunes that hen has made.
Give her feed and a little care—
She’ll pay for clothes you have to wear.
She’ll pay the mortgage on the farm,
And your spare change she’ll help to earn;
Give them a chance, they’ll be your friend.
Yes, the cow, the sow and the hen.
The farmer’s wife takes all the care;
She makes the butter they have to spai’e.
She feeds the hens the chickens raise,
And ties the cow where she can graze.
She slops the hogs and feeds them well—
There’s always something she can sell;
She does the work to help the men—
She feeds the cow, the sow and the hen.
AND
A
LITTLE
COTTON
NOW
AND
THEN.
LOGANVILLE MAN HAS
PROSPEROUS BUSINESS
Mr. .T. W. Garrett, of Lognnville, has
worked out a little manufacturing es
tablislimcnt which is bringing him a
handsome little revenue which can ho
patterned after bv every farmer in the
county.
He is located on a small lot of only
two or three acres in the town of Lo-
ganville and is, therefore, handicapped
for room loit, notwithstanding this han
dicap,has made remarkable success of
his venture this year. ’
Mr. Garrett started out at the begin
ning of this year to keep n careful re
cord of everything he sold from the lot.
lie has had an average of three milk
cows and a hundred and twenty-live
hens. He sells the butter, eggs and
surplus chickens through his mnrkel
club, thus insuring n steady and de
pendable market for it.
He has been making some calcula
tions of late and counting up his income
so far and is of the opinion that his
income from these cows and chickens
will be at least fifteen dundred dollars
this year. He is well on the way to
ward’ this sum now and sees no reason
why it should not reach that total not
withstanding the fact that the dull sea
son of the year so far as production
goes is ahead of him.
This adds additional proof to the plea
of The Tribune for the cow, the hog
and "the lien, and we are of the opinion
that, if more of the farmers of the
county were doing what Mr. Garrett is
doing, there would be more money in
the hands of the farmers and they
would be more prosperous. We con
gratulate Mr. Garrett on this enviable
record ami take pleasuro in giving this
information to onr readers with the
hope that others will follow his exam
ple.
It will be of interest to note that
these stock and chickens are fed largely
oil feds grown on his own farms which
gives him a considerable profit over
those who have to buy nil their feeds.
- The Walton News.
NO
‘ALL COTTON’’ CROP
FOR WILKES COUNTY
To Hold Down Appropriations
Thos Legislature Determined
Atlanta, Ga.—It has been many a
year since Georgia had a legislatruo
which was so seriously determined, as
the present General Assembly is, to hold
down appropriations. •
The appeals from different depart
ments for more monoyV-is fulling on ears
which may be sympathetic but so far
tlie sympathy is chiefly for the tax
payer, as it should be, according to
some of the leading members of tlie as
sembly.
The exposure of the great growtli in
exponses in recent years has been wide
ly publilised in the newspapers and the
people, say many lawmakers, are de
manding rigid economy.
A sa rule, legislation is Bhaped by
the committees. Many a trick has been
pu tover in the past by complacent com
mittees. This year, tho committees are
hard-boiled when it comes to spending
money.
It seems to be generally understood
that it will be bad politics to boost
larger appropriations this summert
Thanks to the nowspapers and especi
ally the weeklies. The pooplo nre
watching the expenses because largo ap
propriations mean higher taxes, it is
pointed out here.
In connection with tho bill wliihc has
been introduced to Tepeal the law
which created the new class of pension
ers, it is stated that while there are
17,000 on tb'c state’s pension rolls
there are less than 7,000 Confederate
veterans still living in Georgia.
Atlanta, Ga.—The story of how a
Georgia county threw off the yoke of
all cotton” crop and found in crop
diversification a remedy for the many
ills n too faithful adhernneo to cotton
had placed upon its farmers, is inter
estingly told" in national publications
by Will W. Bruner, editor of the Wash
ington (Ga.- News-Reporter.
Wilkes county, Georgia, for (more
than one hundred years had been grow
ing cotton to the exclusion of almost
all other crops. The resull was that
tlie farmers of Wilkes county prosper
eel only when cotton was high in price
and were under a burden of debt when
the staple became -unprofitable.
Mr, Bruner, in his article, tells how
the Khvnuis club of Washington, the
county sent of Wilkes, with the co-op
eration of the business men and bank
ers of the town and tlie progressive
farmers of the cunty, inaugurated a
program of development for the county
which lias had amazing results.
The Kiwnnians adopted the slogan:
“Co-operation, square deal, good will
the cow, the hog, the lien; a little cot
ton now and then.’’ A better slogan,
in the opinion of the state agricultur
ists, culd hardly be devised. With the
hearty Support of business interests and
farming interests, tho Kiwnnis club
started to carry out its program for
diversification.
Dairying lias been introduced, n
creamery is under construction, pure
bred eggs have been purchased to take
the place of ordinary kind for settings
and a ton-thousand egg hatchery is un
der construction. Tho county had been
producing purebred hogs for a num
ber of years and this industry has been
enlarged. Crops suitable to the land
have bene planted to tako tho place of
so much cotton, and Wilkes county is
seeing daylight ahead and financial free
dom for the farmers is well in sight.
As agriculturists here point out, a
splendid exnmple is being set by the
Georgia county for other counties ii<
the South. What is possible in one
Georgia county is possible in almost
any county in other southern states.
All that is needed is, farmer oxperts
say, for some organization with tho
determination of the Washington, Ga.,
Kiwasnis club to start the movement.
Southern farmers are willing, Georgia
agriculturists claim, to plant loss cot
ton if they can be shown that it will
pay them better to produce other crops,
to add dairying and liog raising and
produce cotton only ns a part of their
faming activity.
MARKET NEWS BY RADIO
T HERE is a differ
ence in tires.
Only the new Good
year Cord Tire is
made of highest-
grade, long-staple,
high-tensile cotton,
built up by the
Goodyear patented
group-ply method,
and equipped with
heavier sidewalls
and the beveled All-
WeatherTread. The
difference shows in
the Goodyear’s
longer wear and
lower cost per mile.
At Goodyear Servlet Station
Dealer e we tell and recom
mend the new Goodyear
Cordt with tha beveled Ait-
Weather Tread and bach
them up with ttandard
Goodyear Service
WEBB HARRIS AUTO CO.
ROOP HARDWARE CO.
©OOBi>YEAR
THOUGHT BACK
WOULD BREAK
Nothing Helped until She
Began Taking Lydia E. Pink-
ham’s Vegetable Compound
Farmers nro making use of the radio
in obtaining market reports. Nation
wide, practical use of these reports
sent broadcast by the TJ. 8. Department
of Agriculture is indicated in a survey
just completed. Nearly fifty per cent
of the hundreds of returns to an in
quiry sent out by radio wero from
farmers who lmd Tadio receiving equip
ment. The remainder of the returns
wero from agencies which disseminate
the reports among largo groups of far
mers. Greatest interest was shown in
the grain market reports, which inform
farmers of wheat, corn and oat prices at
tho loading grain market. Next in im
portance came the livo stock reports of
prices and movements at tho principal
live stock markets of the country. The
wcater reports came next.
Negotiations to speed up restoration
of friendly relations between our coun
try and Mexico are under way. It’s
been considerable time since our neigh
bor on the South has been getting on
the front page.
‘ ‘When my baby was born, ’ ’says Mrs.
Posluszny, 106 High Street, Bay City,
Michigan, “I got up
too soon. It made
me so sick that I was
tired of living and
the weakness run me
down something aw
ful. I could not get
up out of bed morn
ings on account of
my back; I thought it
would break in two,
and if I started to do
any work I would
have to lie down. I do
notbelieve thatany woman ever suffered
worse than I did. 1 spent lots of money,
but nothing helped me until I began to
take Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable
Compound. I felt a whole lot better
after the first bottle, and I am still tak
ing it for I am sure it is what has put
me on my feet.”
If you are suffering from a displace
ment, irregularities, backache, nervous
ness, sideache or any other form of fe
male weaknes you should write to The
Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co., Lynn,
Massachusetts, for Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Private Text-Book upon “Ailments Pe
culiar to Women. ” It will be sent you
free upon request. This book contains
valuable information.
To The Newcomers:
Everything else being equal, we all pre
fer to do business with our friends. This
store knows this—and since 90 per cent of
our business is transacted with old friends
who have dealt with us a long time, we
want to extend the same friendly, helpful
spirit to the newcomer who enters our
doors.
We value our friends and try to make
the point clear in our dealings with them.
We’ve been accumulating friends for a long
time. We want jnore of them, because we
find doing business with friends is more
pleasant as well as more profitable to all
concerned.
PHONE 294—MAIL ORDERS FILLED
SAME DAY RECEIVED
Moore & Clein
“The Bargain Merchants of Carrollton”
“You will Always Find Us on the Square”
Ut